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Test Bank - Essentials of Genetics, 10th Edition (Klug, 2020), Chapter 1-21 + Special Topics | All Chapters £16.38   Add to cart

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Test Bank - Essentials of Genetics, 10th Edition (Klug, 2020), Chapter 1-21 + Special Topics | All Chapters

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Table Of Content 1. Introduction to Genetics 2. Mitosis and Meiosis 3. Mendelian Genetics 4. Modification of Mendelian Ratios 5. Sex Determination and Sex Chromosomes 6. Chromosome Mutations: Variation in Number and Arrangement 7. Linkage and Chromosome Mapping in Eukaryotes 8. Genetic Analysis and...

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Essentials of Genetics, 10th Edition (Klug)
Chapter 1 Introduction to Genetics

1) The CRISPR-Cas system potentially represents one of the most power techniques in genetics
as a result of its role in associated with specific human disorders.
A) identifying genes
B) editing genes
C) producing new genes
D) regulating genes
E) transmitting genes
Answer: B
Section: Introduction
Bloom's Taxonomy: Remembering/Understanding

2) In the 1600s, William Harvey studied reproduction and development. What is the term given
M
to his theory which states that an organism develops from the fertilized egg by a succession of
developmental events that lead to an adult?
A) preformation
B) spontaneous generation
ED
C) cell theory
D) transduction
E) epigenesis
Answer: E
Section: 1.1
Bloom's Taxonomy: Remembering/Understanding
G
3) What is the term given to the theory which states that the gamete contains a complete
miniature adult?
A) preformation
EE
B) transduction
C) transformation
D) conjugation
E) cell theory
Answer: A
Section: 1.1
K
Bloom's Taxonomy: Remembering/Understanding

4) What is the term given to the theory which put forth the idea that living organisms could arise
by incubating nonliving components?
A) spontaneous generation
B) natural selection
C) evolution
D) preformation
E) collective combination
Answer: A
Section: 1.1
Bloom's Taxonomy: Remembering/Understanding


1

,5) Schleiden and Schwann proposed the cell theory which states that .
A) cells contain genetic information in their nucleus
B) cells move from the various parts of the body to the reproductive organs to produce offspring
C) cells are derived from preexisting cells
D) cells propagate via asexual reproduction
E) cells represent the basic units of heredity
Answer: C
Section: 1.1
Bloom's Taxonomy: Remembering/Understanding

6) Who, along with Alfred Wallace, formulated the theory of natural selection?
A) Gregor Mendel
B) William Harvey
C) Louis Pasteur
D) Charles Darwin
M
E) James Watson
Answer: D
Section: 1.1
Bloom's Taxonomy: Remembering/Understanding
ED
7) Which of the following is an example of natural selection?
A) a bird's beak is able to effectively crack the seeds it encounters
B) dog breeding by humans
C) depending on the food a turtle eats, its shell may grow faster or slower
D) sometime during human's life they break a bone
G
E) bacteria can be effectively killed by treatment with bleach
Answer: A
Section: 1.1
Bloom's Taxonomy: Evaluating/Creating
EE
8) Which of the following botanists was not involved with bringing Mendel's work to light in the
1900s?
A) Carl Correns
B) Carl Linnaeus
C) Hugo de Vries
K
D) Erich Tschermak
Answer: A
Section: 1.1
Bloom's Taxonomy: Remembering/Understanding




2

,9) Who was the Augustinian monk that conducted a decade of experiments on the garden pea,
eventually showing that traits are passed from parents to offspring in predictable ways?
A) Francis Crick
B) Alfred Wallace
C) Hippocrates
D) Aristotle
E) Gregor Mendel
Answer: E
Section: 1.2
Bloom's Taxonomy: Remembering/Understanding

10) In many species, there are two representatives of each chromosome. In such species, the
characteristic number of chromosomes is called the number. It is usually symbolized
as .
A) haploid; n
B) haploid; 2n
M
C) diploid; 2n
D) diploid; n
E) polyploid; n
Answer: C
ED
Section: 1.2
Bloom's Taxonomy: Remembering/Understanding

11) Genetics is defined as the branch of biology associated with .
A) heredity and variation
B) mutation and recession
G
C) transcription and translation
D) diploid and haploid
E) replication and recombination
Answer: A
EE
Section: 1.2
Bloom's Taxonomy: Remembering/Understanding

12) Early in the twentieth century, Walter Sutton and Theodor Boveri noted that the behavior of
chromosomes during meiosis is identical to the behavior of genes during gamete formation. They
proposed that genes are carried on chromosomes, which led to the basis .
K
A) of the germ-plasm theory
B) of the chromosome theory of inheritance
C) of the law of independent assortment
D) for the determination of DNA as genetic material
E) of predicting patterns of inheritance
Answer: B
Section: 1.2
Bloom's Taxonomy: Remembering/Understanding




3

, 13) What is a simple definition of an allele?
Answer: An allele is an alternative form of a gene.
Section: 1.2
Bloom's Taxonomy: Remembering/Understanding

14) The observable feature of an organism is referred to as a .
A) genotype
B) phenotype
C) prototype
D) karyotype
E) bryophyte
Answer: B
Section: 1.2
Bloom's Taxonomy: Remembering/Understanding

15) Until the mid-1940s, many scientists considered proteins to be the likely candidates for the
M
genetic material. Which of the following characteristics led scientists to believe DNA was NOT
the genetic material?
A) DNA is more stable than protein.
B) DNA is less abundant than protein.
ED
C) DNA has less variation than protein.
D) Protein can fold into may shapes.
E) DNA is less abundant than protein and DNA has less variation than protein.
Answer: E
Section: 1.2
Bloom's Taxonomy: Applying/Analyzing
G
16) Which of the following is an example of heredity?
A) A man has low blood pressure due to medications.
B) Both moths and birds have wings and can fly.
EE
C) Dalmation dogs all have spots.
D) Whales and fish both swim.
E) Flies and molluscs both have eyes.
Answer: C
Section: 1.2
Bloom's Taxonomy: Evaluating/Creating
K
17) Which is not a component of DNA?
A) mRNA
B) deoxyribose sugar
C) nitrogenous base
D) phosphate
Answer: A
Section: 1.3
Bloom's Taxonomy: Remembering/Understanding




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